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<head>Universal
House of Justice letter of 23 January 1995</head>

<p>23 January 1995</p>

<p>To the National Spiritual Assemblies of the Bahá’ís
throughout the world</p>

<p>Dear Friends,</p>

<p>As the twentieth century rapidly approaches its end,
there is a marked acceleration in the efforts of governments and
peoples to reach common understandings on issues affecting the future
of humankind. The 1992 Conference on Environment and Development held
in Rio de Janeiro, the 1993 World Conference on Human Rights in
Vienna, the 1994 International Conference on Population and
Development in Cairo, the forthcoming March 1995 World Summit for
Social Development in Copenhagen, to be followed in September by the
Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing, are conspicuous
indications of this acceleration. These events are as capstones to
the myriad activities taking place in different parts of the world
involving a wide range of nongovernmental organizations and networks
in an urgent search for values, ideas and practical measures that can
advance prospects for the peaceful development of all peoples. In
this endeavor can be discerned the gathering momentum of an emerging
unity of thought in world undertakings, the realization of which our
sacred scriptures describe as one of the lights of unity that will
illumine the path to peace. The Bahá’ís around
the world are, of course, heartened by such hopeful trends and will
continue increasingly to lend moral and practical support to them as
opportunities allow.</p>

<p>In view of the intensive attention being given to the
issues of social and economic development since the Earth Summit in
Brazil, we requested the Bahá’í International
Community’s Office of Public Information to prepare a statement
on the concept of global prosperity in the context of the Bahá’í
Teachings. This statement is now ready for distribution. We are
therefore very pleased to send each of you herewith a copy of “The
Prosperity of Humankind” and to commend it to your use as you
pursue activities that enable you to interact with governments,
organizations, and people everywhere. Our confident hope is that the
statement will assist you to foster understanding of this important
topic among the members of your communities and thus vitalize their
contribution to the constructive social processes at work throughout
the planet.</p>

<p>With loving Bahá’í greetings,<lb />
[The Universal House of Justice]</p>

<p>Enclosure</p>


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<head>The Prosperity of Humankind</head>

<p>To an extent unimaginable a decade ago, the ideal of
world peace is taking on form and substance. Obstacles that long
seemed immovable have collapsed in humanity’s path; apparently
irreconcilable conflicts have begun to surrender to processes of
consultation and resolution; a willingness to counter military
aggression through unified international action is emerging. The
effect has been to awaken in both the masses of humanity and many
world leaders a degree of hopefulness about the future of our planet
that had been nearly extinguished.</p>

<p>Throughout the world, immense intellectual and spiritual
energies are seeking expression, energies whose gathering pressure is
in direct proportion to the frustrations of recent decades.
Everywhere the signs multiply that the earth’s peoples yearn
for an end to conflict and to the suffering and ruin from which no
land is any longer immune. These rising impulses for change must be
seized upon and channeled into overcoming the remaining barriers that
block realization of the age-old dream of global peace. The effort of
will required for such a task cannot be summoned up merely by appeals
for action against the countless ills afflicting society. It must be
galvanized by a vision of human prosperity in the fullest sense of
the term—an awakening to the possibilities of the spiritual and
material well-being now brought within grasp. Its beneficiaries must
be all of the planet’s inhabitants, without distinction,
without the imposition of conditions unrelated to the fundamental
goals of such a reorganization of human affairs.</p>

<p>History has thus far recorded principally the experience
of tribes, cultures, classes, and nations. With the physical
unification of the planet in this century and acknowledgement of the
interdependence of all who live on it, the history of humanity as one
people is now beginning. The long, slow civilizing of human character
has been a sporadic development, uneven and admittedly inequitable in
the material advantages it has conferred. Nevertheless, endowed with
the wealth of all the genetic and cultural diversity that has evolved
through past ages, the earth’s inhabitants are now challenged
to draw on their collective inheritance to take up, consciously and
systematically, the responsibility for the design of their future.</p>

<p>It is unrealistic to imagine that the vision of the next
stage in the advancement of civilization can be formulated without a
searching reexamination of the attitudes and assumptions that
currently underlie approaches to social and economic development. At
the most obvious level, such rethinking will have to address
practical matters of policy, resource utilization, planning
procedures, implementation methodologies, and organization. As it
proceeds, however, fundamental issues will quickly emerge, related to
the long-term goals to be pursued, the social structures required,
the implications for development of principles of social justice, and
the nature and role of knowledge in effecting enduring change.
Indeed, such a reexamination will be driven to seek a broad consensus
of understanding about human nature itself.</p>

<p>Two avenues of discussion open directly onto all of
these issues, whether conceptual or practical, and it is along these
two avenues that we wish to explore, in the pages that follow, the
subject of a strategy of global development. The first is prevailing
beliefs about the nature and purpose of the development process; the
second is the roles assigned in it to the various protagonists.</p>

<p>The assumptions directing most of current development
planning are essentially materialistic. That is to say, the purpose
of development is defined in terms of the successful cultivation in
all societies of those means for the achievement of material
prosperity that have, through trial and error, already come to
characterize certain regions of the world. Modifications in
development discourse do indeed occur, accommodating differences of
culture and political system and responding to the alarming dangers
posed by environmental degradation. Yet the underlying materialistic
assumptions remain essentially unchallenged.</p>

<p>As the twentieth century draws to a close, it is no
longer possible to maintain the belief that the approach to social
and economic development to which the materialistic conception of
life has given rise is capable of meeting humanity’s needs.
Optimistic forecasts about the changes it would generate have
vanished into the ever-widening abyss that separates the living
standards of a small and relatively diminishing minority of the
world’s inhabitants from the poverty experienced by the vast
majority of the globe’s population.</p>

<p>This unprecedented economic crisis, together with the
social breakdown it has helped to engender, reflects a profound error
of conception about human nature itself. For the levels of response
elicited from human beings by the incentives of the prevailing order
are not only inadequate, but seem almost irrelevant in the face of
world events. We are being shown that, unless the development of
society finds a purpose beyond the mere amelioration of material
conditions, it will fail of attaining even these goals. That purpose
must be sought in spiritual dimensions of life and motivation that
transcend a constantly changing economic landscape and an
artificially imposed division of human societies into “developed”
and “developing”.</p>

<p>As the purpose of development is being redefined, it
will become necessary also to look again at assumptions about the
appropriate roles to be played by the protagonists in the process.
The crucial role of government, at whatever level, requires no
elaboration. Future generations, however, will find almost
incomprehensible the circumstance that, in an age paying tribute to
an egalitarian philosophy and related democratic principles,
development planning should view the masses of humanity as
essentially recipients of benefits from aid and training. Despite
acknowledgement of participation as a principle, the scope of the
decision making left to most of the world’s population is at
best secondary, limited to a range of choices formulated by agencies
inaccessible to them and determined by goals that are often
irreconcilable with their perceptions of reality.</p>

<p>This approach is even endorsed, implicitly if not
explicitly, by established religion. Burdened by traditions of
paternalism, prevailing religious thought seems incapable of
translating an expressed faith in the spiritual dimensions of human
nature into confidence in humanity’s collective capacity to
transcend material conditions.</p>

<p>Such an attitude misses the significance of what is
likely the most important social phenomenon of our time. If it is
true that the governments of the world are striving through the
medium of the United Nations system to construct a new global order,
it is equally true that the peoples of the world are galvanized by
this same vision. Their response has taken the form of a sudden
efflorescence of countless movements and organizations of social
change at local, regional, and international levels. Human rights,
the advance of women, the social requirements of sustainable economic
development, the overcoming of prejudices, the moral education of
children, literacy, primary health care, and a host of other vital
concerns each commands the urgent advocacy of organizations supported
by growing numbers in every part of the globe.</p>

<p>This response of the world’s people themselves to
the crying needs of the age echoes the call that Bahá’u’lláh
raised over a hundred years ago: “Be anxiously concerned with
the needs of the age ye live in, and center your deliberations on its
exigencies and requirements.” The transformation in the way
that great numbers of ordinary people are coming to see themselves—a
change that is dramatically abrupt in the perspective of the history
of civilization—raises fundamental questions about the role
assigned to the general body of humanity in the planning of our
planet’s future.</p>


</div>

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<head>I</head>

<p>The bedrock of a strategy that can engage the world’s
population in assuming responsibility for its collective destiny must
be the consciousness of the oneness of humankind. Deceptively simple
in popular discourse, the concept that humanity constitutes a single
people presents fundamental challenges to the way that most of the
institutions of contemporary society carry out their functions.
Whether in the form of the adversarial structure of civil government,
the advocacy principle informing most of civil law, a glorification
of the struggle between classes and other social groups, or the
competitive spirit dominating so much of modern life, conflict is
accepted as the mainspring of human interaction. It represents yet
another expression in social organization of the materialistic
interpretation of life that has progressively consolidated itself
over the past two centuries.</p>

<p>In a letter addressed to Queen Victoria over a century
ago, and employing an analogy that points to the one model holding
convincing promise for the organization of a planetary society,
Bahá’u’lláh compared the world to the human
body. There is, indeed, no other model in phenomenal existence to
which we can reasonably look. Human society is composed not of a mass
of merely differentiated cells but of associations of individuals,
each one of whom is endowed with intelligence and will; nevertheless,
the modes of operation that characterize man’s biological
nature illustrate fundamental principles of existence. Chief among
these is that of unity in diversity. Paradoxically, it is precisely
the wholeness and complexity of the order constituting the human
body—and the perfect integration into it of the body’s
cells—that permit the full realization of the distinctive
capacities inherent in each of these component elements. No cell
lives apart from the body, whether in contributing to its functioning
or in deriving its share from the well-being of the whole. The
physical well-being thus achieved finds its purpose in making
possible the expression of human consciousness; that is to say, the
purpose of biological development transcends the mere existence of
the body and its parts.</p>

<p>What is true of the life of the individual has its
parallels in human society. The human species is an organic whole,
the leading edge of the evolutionary process. That human
consciousness necessarily operates through an infinite diversity of
individual minds and motivations detracts in no way from its
essential unity. Indeed, it is precisely an inhering diversity that
distinguishes unity from homogeneity or uniformity. What the peoples
of the world are today experiencing, Bahá’u’lláh
said, is their collective coming- of-age, and it is through this
emerging maturity of the race that the principle of unity in
diversity will find full expression. From its earliest beginnings in
the consolidation of family life, the process of social organization
has successively moved from the simple structures of clan and tribe,
through multitudinous forms of urban society, to the eventual
emergence of the nation-state, each stage opening up a wealth of new
opportunities for the exercise of human capacity.</p>

<p>Clearly, the advancement of the race has not occurred at
the expense of human individuality. As social organization has
increased, the scope for the expression of the capacities latent in
each human being has correspondingly expanded. Because the
relationship between the individual and society is a reciprocal one,
the transformation now required must occur simultaneously within
human consciousness and the structure of social institutions. It is
in the opportunities afforded by this twofold process of change that
a strategy of global development will find its purpose. At this
crucial stage of history, that purpose must be to establish enduring
foundations on which planetary civilization can gradually take shape.
</p>

<p>Laying the groundwork for global civilization calls for
the creation of laws and institutions that are universal in both
character and authority. The effort can begin only when the concept
of the oneness of humanity has been wholeheartedly embraced by those
in whose hands the responsibility for decision making rests, and when
the related principles are propagated through both educational
systems and the media of mass communication. Once this threshold is
crossed, a process will have been set in motion through which the
peoples of the world can be drawn into the task of formulating common
goals and committing themselves to their attainment. Only so
fundamental a reorientation can protect them, too, from the age-old
demons of ethnic and religious strife. Only through the dawning
consciousness that they constitute a single people will the
inhabitants of the planet be enabled to turn away from the patterns
of conflict that have dominated social organization in the past and
begin to learn the ways of collaboration and conciliation. “The
well-being of mankind,” Bahá’u’lláh
writes, “its peace and security, are unattainable unless and
until its unity is firmly established.”</p>


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<head>II</head>

<p>Justice is the one power that can translate the dawning
consciousness of humanity’s oneness into a collective will
through which the necessary structures of global community life can
be confidently erected. An age that sees the people of the world
increasingly gaining access to information of every kind and to a
diversity of ideas will find justice asserting itself as the ruling
principle of successful social organization. With ever greater
frequency, proposals aiming at the development of the planet will
have to submit to the candid light of the standards it requires.</p>

<p>At the individual level, justice is that faculty of the
human soul that enables each person to distinguish truth from
falsehood. In the sight of God, Bahá’u’lláh
avers, justice is “the best beloved of all things” since
it permits each individual to see with his own eyes rather than the
eyes of others, to know through his own knowledge rather than the
knowledge of his neighbor or his group. It calls for fair-mindedness
in one’s judgments, for equity in one’s treatment of
others, and is thus a constant if demanding companion in the daily
occasions of life.</p>

<p>At the group level, a concern for justice is the
indispensable compass in collective decision making, because it is
the only means by which unity of thought and action can be achieved.
Far from encouraging the punitive spirit that has often masqueraded
under its name in past ages, justice is the practical expression of
awareness that, in the achievement of human progress, the interests
of the individual and those of society are inextricably linked. To
the extent that justice becomes a guiding concern of human
interaction, a consultative climate is encouraged that permits
options to be examined dispassionately and appropriate courses of
action selected. In such a climate the perennial tendencies toward
manipulation and partisanship are far less likely to deflect the
decision-making process.</p>

<p>The implications for social and economic development are
profound. Concern for justice protects the task of defining progress
from the temptation to sacrifice the well-being of the generality of
humankind—and even of the planet itself—to the advantages
which technological breakthroughs can make available to privileged
minorities. In design and planning, it ensures that limited resources
are not diverted to the pursuit of projects extraneous to a
community’s essential social or economic priorities. Above all,
only development programs that are perceived as meeting their needs
and as being just and equitable in objective can hope to engage the
commitment of the masses of humanity, upon whom implementation
depends. The relevant human qualities such as honesty, a willingness
to work, and a spirit of cooperation are successfully harnessed to
the accomplishment of enormously demanding collective goals when
every member of society—indeed every component group within
society—can trust that they are protected by standards and
assured of benefits that apply equally to all.</p>

<p>At the heart of the discussion of a strategy of social
and economic development, therefore, lies the issue of human rights.
The shaping of such a strategy calls for the promotion of human
rights to be freed from the grip of the false dichotomies that have
for so long held it hostage. Concern that each human being should
enjoy the freedom of thought and action conducive to his or her
personal growth does not justify devotion to the cult of
individualism that so deeply corrupts many areas of contemporary
life. Nor does concern to ensure the welfare of society as a whole
require a deification of the state as the supposed source of
humanity’s well-being. Far otherwise: the history of the
present century shows all too clearly that such ideologies and the
partisan agendas to which they give rise have been themselves the
principal enemies of the interests they purport to serve. Only in a
consultative framework made possible by the consciousness of the
organic unity of humankind can all aspects of the concern for human
rights find legitimate and creative expression.</p>

<p>Today, the agency on whom has devolved the task of
creating this framework and of liberating the promotion of human
rights from those who would exploit it is the system of international
institutions born out of the tragedies of two ruinous world wars and
the experience of worldwide economic breakdown. Significantly, the
term “human rights” has come into general use only since
the promulgation of the United Nations Charter in 1945 and the
adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights three years
later. In these history-making documents, formal recognition has been
given to respect for social justice as a correlative of the
establishment of world peace. The fact that the Declaration passed
without a dissenting vote in the General Assembly conferred on it
from the outset an authority that has grown steadily in the
intervening years.</p>

<p>The activity most intimately linked to the consciousness
that distinguishes human nature is the individual’s exploration
of reality for himself or herself. The freedom to investigate the
purpose of existence and to develop the endowments of human nature
that make it achievable requires protection. Human beings must be
free to know. That such freedom is often abused and such abuse
grossly encouraged by features of contemporary society does not
detract in any degree from the validity of the impulse itself.</p>

<p>It is this distinguishing impulse of human consciousness
that provides the moral imperative for the enunciation of many of the
rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration and the related
Covenants. Universal education, freedom of movement, access to
information, and the opportunity to participate in political life are
all aspects of its operation that require explicit guarantee by the
international community. The same is true of freedom of thought and
belief, including religious liberty, along with the right to hold
opinions and express these opinions appropriately.</p>

<p>Since the body of humankind is one and indivisible, each
member of the race is born into the world as a trust of the whole.
This trusteeship constitutes the moral foundation of most of the
other rights—principally economic and social—which the
instruments of the United Nations are attempting similarly to define.
The security of the family and the home, the ownership of property,
and the right to privacy are all implied in such a trusteeship. The
obligations on the part of the community extend to the provision of
employment, mental and physical health care, social security, fair
wages, rest and recreation, and a host of other reasonable
expectations on the part of the individual members of society.</p>

<p>The principle of collective trusteeship creates also the
right of every person to expect that those cultural conditions
essential to his or her identity enjoy the protection of national and
international law. Much like the role played by the gene pool in the
biological life of humankind and its environment, the immense wealth
of cultural diversity achieved over thousands of years is vital to
the social and economic development of a human race experiencing its
collective coming-of-age. It represents a heritage that must be
permitted to bear its fruit in a global civilization. On the one
hand, cultural expressions need to be protected from suffocation by
the materialistic influences currently holding sway. On the other,
cultures must be enabled to interact with one another in
ever-changing patterns of civilization, free of manipulation for
partisan political ends.</p>

<p>“The light of men”, Bahá’u’lláh
says, “is Justice. Quench it not with the contrary winds of
oppression and tyranny. The purpose of justice is the appearance of
unity among men. The ocean of divine wisdom surgeth within this
exalted word, while the books of the world cannot contain its inner
significance.”</p>


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<head>III</head>

<p>In order for the standard of human rights now in the
process of formulation by the community of nations to be promoted and
established as prevailing international norms, a fundamental
redefinition of human relationships is called for. Present-day
conceptions of what is natural and appropriate in relationships—among
human beings themselves, between human beings and nature, between the
individual and society, and between the members of society and its
institutions—reflect levels of understanding arrived at by the
human race during earlier and less mature stages in its development.
If humanity is indeed coming of age, if all the inhabitants of the
planet constitute a single people, if justice is to be the ruling
principle of social organization—then existing conceptions that
were born out of ignorance of these emerging realities have to be
recast.</p>

<p>Movement in this direction has barely begun. It will
lead, as it unfolds, to a new understanding of the nature of the
family and of the rights and responsibilities of each of its members.
It will entirely transform the role of women at every level of
society. Its effect in reordering people’s relation to the work
they do and their understanding of the place of economic activity in
their lives will be sweeping. It will bring about far-reaching
changes in the governance of human affairs and in the institutions
created to carry it out. Through its influence, the work of society’s
rapidly proliferating nongovernmental organizations will be
increasingly rationalized. It will ensure the creation of binding
legislation that will protect both the environment and the
development needs of all peoples. Ultimately, the restructuring or
transformation of the United Nations system that this movement is
already bringing about will no doubt lead to the establishment of a
world federation of nations with its own legislative, judicial, and
executive bodies.</p>

<p>Central to the task of reconceptualizing the system of
human relationships is the process that Bahá’u’lláh
refers to as consultation. “In all things it is necessary to
consult,” is His advice. “The maturity of the gift of
understanding is made manifest through consultation.”</p>

<p>The standard of truth seeking this process demands is
far beyond the patterns of negotiation and compromise that tend to
characterize the present-day discussion of human affairs. It cannot
be achieved—indeed, its attainment is severely handicapped—by
the culture of protest that is another widely prevailing feature of
contemporary society. Debate, propaganda, the adversarial method, the
entire apparatus of partisanship that have long been such familiar
features of collective action are all fundamentally harmful to its
purpose: that is, arriving at a consensus about the truth of a given
situation and the wisest choice of action among the options open at
any given moment.</p>

<p>What Bahá’u’lláh is calling
for is a consultative process in which the individual participants
strive to transcend their respective points of view, in order to
function as members of a body with its own interests and goals. In
such an atmosphere, characterized by both candor and courtesy, ideas
belong not to the individual to whom they occur during the discussion
but to the group as a whole, to take up, discard, or revise as seems
to best serve the goal pursued. Consultation succeeds to the extent
that all participants support the decisions arrived at, regardless of
the individual opinions with which they entered the discussion. Under
such circumstances an earlier decision can be readily reconsidered if
experience exposes any shortcomings.</p>

<p>Viewed in such a light, consultation is the operating
expression of justice in human affairs. So vital is it to the success
of collective endeavor that it must constitute a basic feature of a
viable strategy of social and economic development. Indeed, the
participation of the people on whose commitment and efforts the
success of such a strategy depends becomes effective only as
consultation is made the organizing principle of every project. “No
man can attain his true station”, is Bahá’u’lláh’s
counsel, “except through his justice. No power can exist except
through unity. No welfare and no well-being can be attained except
through consultation.”</p>


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<head>IV</head>

<p>The tasks entailed in the development of a global
society call for levels of capacity far beyond anything the human
race has so far been able to muster. Reaching these levels will
require an enormous expansion in access to knowledge, on the part of
individuals and social organizations alike. Universal education will
be an indispensable contributor to this process of capacity building,
but the effort will succeed only as human affairs are so reorganized
as to enable both individuals and groups in every sector of society
to acquire knowledge and apply it to the shaping of human affairs.</p>

<p>Throughout recorded history, human consciousness has
depended upon two basic knowledge systems through which its
potentialities have progressively been expressed: science and
religion. Through these two agencies, the race’s experience has
been organized, its environment interpreted, its latent powers
explored, and its moral and intellectual life disciplined. They have
acted as the real progenitors of civilization. With the benefit of
hindsight, it is evident, moreover, that the effectiveness of this
dual structure has been greatest during those periods when, each in
its own sphere, religion and science were able to work in concert.</p>

<p>Given the almost universal respect in which science is
currently held, its credentials need no elaboration. In the context
of a strategy of social and economic development, the issue rather is
how scientific and technological activity is to be organized. If the
work involved is viewed chiefly as the preserve of established elites
living in a small number of nations, it is obvious that the enormous
gap which such an arrangement has already created between the world’s
rich and poor will only continue to widen, with the disastrous
consequences for the world’s economy already noted. Indeed, if
most of humankind continue to be regarded mainly as users of products
of science and technology created elsewhere, then programs ostensibly
designed to serve their needs cannot properly be termed
“development”.</p>

<p>A central challenge, therefore—and an enormous
one—is the expansion of scientific and technological activity.
Instruments of social and economic change so powerful must cease to
be the patrimony of advantaged segments of society, and must be so
organized as to permit people everywhere to participate in such
activity on the basis of capacity. Apart from the creation of
programs that make the required education available to all who are
able to benefit from it, such reorganization will require the
establishment of viable centers of learning throughout the world,
institutions that will enhance the capability of the world’s
peoples to participate in the generation and application of
knowledge. Development strategy, while acknowledging the wide
differences of individual capacity, must take as a major goal the
task of making it possible for all of the earth’s inhabitants
to approach on an equal basis the processes of science and technology
which are their common birthright. Familiar arguments for maintaining
the status quo grow daily less compelling as the accelerating
revolution in communication technologies now brings information and
training within reach of vast numbers of people around the globe,
wherever they may be, whatever their cultural backgrounds.</p>

<p>The challenges facing humanity in its religious life, if
different in character, are equally daunting. For the vast majority
of the world’s population, the idea that human nature has a
spiritual dimension—indeed that its fundamental identity is
spiritual—is a truth requiring no demonstration. It is a
perception of reality that can be discovered in the earliest records
of civilization and that has been cultivated for several millenia by
every one of the great religious traditions of humanity’s past.
Its enduring achievements in law, the fine arts, and the civilizing
of human intercourse are what give substance and meaning to history.
In one form or another its promptings are a daily influence in the
lives of most people on earth and, as events around the world today
dramatically show, the longings it awakens are both inextinguishable
and incalculably potent.</p>

<p>It would seem obvious, therefore, that efforts of any
kind to promote human progress must seek to tap capacities so
universal and so immensely creative. Why, then, have spiritual issues
facing humanity not been central to the development discourse? Why
have most of the priorities—indeed most of the underlying
assumptions—of the international development agenda been
determined so far by materialistic world views to which only small
minorities of the earth’s population subscribe? How much weight
can be placed on a professed devotion to the principle of universal
participation that denies the validity of the participants’
defining cultural experience?</p>

<p>It may be argued that, since spiritual and moral issues
have historically been bound up with contending theological doctrines
which are not susceptible of objective proof, these issues lie
outside the framework of the international community’s
development concerns. To accord them any significant role would be to
open the door to precisely those dogmatic influences that have
nurtured social conflict and blocked human progress. There is
doubtless a measure of truth in such an argument. Exponents of the
world’s various theological systems bear a heavy responsibility
not only for the disrepute into which faith itself has fallen among
many progressive thinkers, but for the inhibitions and distortions
produced in humanity’s continuing discourse on spiritual
meaning. To conclude, however, that the answer lies in discouraging
the investigation of spiritual reality and ignoring the deepest roots
of human motivation is a self-evident delusion. The sole effect, to
the degree that such censorship has been achieved in recent history,
has been to deliver the shaping of humanity’s future into the
hands of a new orthodoxy, one which argues that truth is amoral and
facts are independent of values.</p>

<p>So far as earthly existence is concerned, many of the
greatest achievements of religion have been moral in character.
Through its teachings and through the examples of human lives
illumined by these teachings, masses of people in all ages and lands
have developed the capacity to love. They have learned to discipline
the animal side of their natures, to make great sacrifices for the
common good, to practise forgiveness, generosity, and trust, to use
wealth and other resources in ways that serve the advancement of
civilization. Institutional systems have been devised to translate
these moral advances into the norms of social life on a vast scale.
However obscured by dogmatic accretions and diverted by sectarian
conflict, the spiritual impulses set in motion by such transcendent
figures as Krishna, Moses, Buddha, Zoroaster, Jesus, and Muhammad
have been the chief influence in the civilizing of human character.</p>

<p>Since, then, the challenge is the empowerment of
humankind through a vast increase in access to knowledge, the
strategy that can make this possible must be constructed around an
ongoing and intensifying dialogue between science and religion. It
is—or by now should be—a truism that, in every sphere of
human activity and at every level, the insights and skills that
represent scientific accomplishment must look to the force of
spiritual commitment and moral principle to ensure their appropriate
application. People need, for example, to learn how to separate fact
from conjecture—indeed to distinguish between subjective views
and objective reality; the extent to which individuals and
institutions so equipped can contribute to human progress, however,
will be determined by their devotion to truth and their detachment
from the promptings of their own interests and passions. Another
capacity that science must cultivate in all people is that of
thinking in terms of process, including historical process; however,
if this intellectual advancement is to contribute ultimately to
promoting development, its perspective must be unclouded by
prejudices of race, culture, sex, or sectarian belief. Similarly, the
training that can make it possible for the earth’s inhabitants
to participate in the production of wealth will advance the aims of
development only to the extent that such an impulse is illumined by
the spiritual insight that service to humankind is the purpose of
both individual life and social organization.</p>


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<head>V</head>

<p>It is in the context of raising the level of human
capacity through the expansion of knowledge at all levels that the
economic issues facing humankind need to be addressed. As the
experience of recent decades has demonstrated, material benefits and
endeavors cannot be regarded as ends in themselves. Their value
consists not only in providing for humanity’s basic needs in
housing, food, health care, and the like, but in extending the reach
of human abilities. The most important role that economic efforts
must play in development lies, therefore, in equipping people and
institutions with the means through which they can achieve the real
purpose of development: that is, laying foundations for a new social
order that can cultivate the limitless potentialities latent in human
consciousness.</p>

<p>The challenge to economic thinking is to accept
unambiguously this purpose of development—and its own role in
fostering creation of the means to achieve it. Only in this way can
economics and the related sciences free themselves from the undertow
of the materialistic preoccupations that now distract them, and
fulfill their potential as tools vital to achieving human well-being
in the full sense of the term. Nowhere is the need for a rigorous
dialogue between the work of science and the insights of religion
more apparent.</p>

<p>The problem of poverty is a case in point. Proposals
aimed at addressing it are predicated on the conviction that material
resources exist, or can be created by scientific and technological
endeavor, which will alleviate and eventually entirely eradicate this
age-old condition as a feature of human life. A major reason why such
relief is not achieved is that the necessary scientific and
technological advances respond to a set of priorities only
tangentially related to the real interests of the generality of
humankind. A radical reordering of these priorities will be required
if the burden of poverty is finally to be lifted from the world. Such
an achievement demands a determined quest for appropriate values, a
quest that will test profoundly both the spiritual and scientific
resources of humankind. Religion will be severely hampered in
contributing to this joint undertaking so long as it is held prisoner
by sectarian doctrines which cannot distinguish between contentment
and mere passivity and which teach that poverty is an inherent
feature of earthly life, escape from which lies only in the world
beyond. To participate effectively in the struggle to bring material
well-being to humanity, the religious spirit must find—in the
Source of inspiration from which it flows—new spiritual
concepts and principles relevant to an age that seeks to establish
unity and justice in human affairs.</p>

<p>Unemployment raises similar issues. In most of
contemporary thinking, the concept of work has been largely reduced
to that of gainful employment aimed at acquiring the means for the
consumption of available goods. The system is circular: acquisition
and consumption resulting in the maintenance and expansion of the
production of goods and, in consequence, in supporting paid
employment. Taken individually, all of these activities are essential
to the well-being of society. The inadequacy of the overall
conception, however, can be read in both the apathy that social
commentators discern among large numbers of the employed in every
land and the demoralization of the growing armies of the unemployed.</p>

<p>Not surprisingly, therefore, there is increasing
recognition that the world is in urgent need of a new “work
ethic”. Here again, nothing less than insights generated by the
creative interaction of the scientific and religious systems of
knowledge can produce so fundamental a reorientation of habits and
attitudes. Unlike animals, which depend for their sustenance on
whatever the environment readily affords, human beings are impelled
to express the immense capacities latent within them through
productive work designed to meet their own needs and those of others.
In acting thus they become participants, at however modest a level,
in the processes of the advancement of civilization. They fulfill
purposes that unite them with others. To the extent that work is
consciously undertaken in a spirit of service to humanity,
Bahá’u’lláh says, it is a form of prayer, a
means of worshiping God. Every individual has the capacity to see
himself or herself in this light, and it is to this inalienable
capacity of the self that development strategy must appeal, whatever
the nature of the plans being pursued, whatever the rewards they
promise. No narrower a perspective will ever call up from the people
of the world the magnitude of effort and commitment that the economic
tasks ahead will require.</p>

<p>A challenge of similar nature faces economic thinking as
a result of the environmental crisis. The fallacies in theories based
on the belief that there is no limit to nature’s capacity to
fulfill any demand made on it by human beings have now been coldly
exposed. A culture which attaches absolute value to expansion, to
acquisition, and to the satisfaction of people’s wants is being
compelled to recognize that such goals are not, by themselves,
realistic guides to policy. Inadequate, too, are approaches to
economic issues whose decision-making tools cannot deal with the fact
that most of the major challenges are global rather than particular
in scope.</p>

<p>The earnest hope that this moral crisis can somehow be
met by deifying nature itself is an evidence of the spiritual and
intellectual desperation that the crisis has engendered. Recognition
that creation is an organic whole and that humanity has the
responsibility to care for this whole, welcome as it is, does not
represent an influence which can by itself establish in the
consciousness of people a new system of values. Only a breakthrough
in understanding that is scientific and spiritual in the fullest
sense of the terms will empower the human race to assume the
trusteeship toward which history impels it.</p>

<p>All people will have sooner or later to recover, for
example, the capacity for contentment, the welcoming of moral
discipline, and the devotion to duty that, until relatively recently,
were considered essential aspects of being human. Repeatedly
throughout history, the teachings of the Founders of the great
religions have been able to instill these qualities of character in
the mass of people who responded to them. The qualities themselves
are even more vital today, but their expression must now take a form
consistent with humanity’s coming-of-age. Here again,
religion’s challenge is to free itself from the obsessions of
the past: contentment is not fatalism; morality has nothing in common
with the life-denying puritanism that has so often presumed to speak
in its name; and a genuine devotion to duty brings feelings not of
self-righteousness but of self-worth.</p>

<p>The effect of the persistent denial to women of full
equality with men sharpens still further the challenge to science and
religion in the economic life of humankind. To any objective observer
the principle of the equality of the sexes is fundamental to all
realistic thinking about the future well-being of the earth and its
people. It represents a truth about human nature that has waited
largely unrecognized throughout the long ages of the race’s
childhood and adolescence. “Women and men”, is
Bahá’u’lláh’s emphatic assertion,
“have been and will always be equal in the sight of God.”
The rational soul has no sex, and whatever social inequities may have
been dictated by the survival requirements of the past, they clearly
cannot be justified at a time when humanity stands at the threshold
of maturity. A commitment to the establishment of full equality
between men and women, in all departments of life and at every level
of society, will be central to the success of efforts to conceive and
implement a strategy of global development.</p>

<p>Indeed, in an important sense, progress in this area
will itself be a measure of the success of any development program.
Given the vital role of economic activity in the advancement of
civilization, visible evidence of the pace at which development is
progressing will be the extent to which women gain access to all
avenues of economic endeavor. The challenge goes beyond ensuring an
equitable distribution of opportunity, important as that is. It calls
for a fundamental rethinking of economic issues in a manner that will
invite the full participation of a range of human experience and
insight hitherto largely excluded from the discourse. The classical
economic models of impersonal markets in which human beings act as
autonomous makers of self-regarding choices will not serve the needs
of a world motivated by ideals of unity and justice. Society will
find itself increasingly challenged to develop new economic models
shaped by insights that arise from a sympathetic understanding of
shared experience, from viewing human beings in relation to others,
and from a recognition of the centrality to social well-being of the
role of the family and the community. Such an intellectual
breakthrough—strongly altruistic rather than self-centered in
focus—must draw heavily on both the spiritual and scientific
sensibilities of the race, and millenia of experience have prepared
women to make crucial contributions to the common effort.</p>


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<head>VI</head>

<p>To contemplate a transformation of society on this scale
is to raise both the question of the power that can be harnessed to
accomplish it and the issue inextricably linked to it, the authority
to exercise that power. As with all other implications of the
accelerating integration of the planet and its people, both of these
familiar terms stand in urgent need of redefinition.</p>

<p>Throughout history—and despite theologically or
ideologically inspired assurances to the contrary—power has
been largely interpreted as advantage enjoyed by persons or groups.
Often, indeed, it has been expressed simply in terms of means to be
used against others. This interpretation of power has become an
inherent feature of the culture of division and conflict that has
characterized the human race during the past several millenia,
regardless of the social, religious, or political orientations that
have enjoyed ascendancy in given ages, in given parts of the world.
In general, power has been an attribute of individuals, factions,
peoples, classes, and nations. It has been an attribute especially
associated with men rather than women. Its chief effect has been to
confer on its beneficiaries the ability to acquire, to surpass, to
dominate, to resist, to win.</p>

<p>The resulting historical processes have been responsible
for both ruinous setbacks in human well-being and extraordinary
advances in civilization. To appreciate the benefits is to
acknowledge also the setbacks, as well as the clear limitations of
the behavioral patterns that have produced both. Habits and attitudes
related to the use of power which emerged during the long ages of
humanity’s infancy and adolescence have reached the outer
limits of their effectiveness. Today, in an era most of whose
pressing problems are global in nature, persistence in the idea that
power means advantage for various segments of the human family is
profoundly mistaken in theory and of no practical service to the
social and economic development of the planet. Those who still adhere
to it—and who could in earlier eras have felt confident in such
adherence—now find their plans enmeshed in inexplicable
frustrations and hindrances. In its traditional, competitive
expression, power is as irrelevant to the needs of humanity’s
future as would be the technologies of railway locomotion to the task
of lifting space satellites into orbits around the earth.</p>

<p>The analogy is more than a little apt. The human race is
being urged by the requirements of its own maturation to free itself
from its inherited understanding and use of power. That it can do so
is demonstrated by the fact that, although dominated by the
traditional conception, humanity has always been able to conceive of
power in other forms critical to its hopes. History provides ample
evidence that, however intermittently and ineptly, people of every
background, throughout the ages, have tapped a wide range of creative
resources within themselves. The most obvious example, perhaps, has
been the power of truth itself, an agent of change associated with
some of the greatest advances in the philosophical, religious,
artistic, and scientific experience of the race. Force of character
represents yet another means of mobilizing immense human response, as
does the influence of example, whether in the lives of individual
human beings or in human societies. Almost wholly unappreciated is
the magnitude of the force that will be generated by the achievement
of unity, an influence “so powerful”, in Bahá’u’lláh’s
words, “that it can illuminate the whole Earth.”</p>

<p>The institutions of society will succeed in eliciting
and directing the potentialities latent in the consciousness of the
world’s peoples to the extent that the exercise of authority is
governed by principles that are in harmony with the evolving
interests of a rapidly maturing human race. Such principles include
the obligation of those in authority to win the confidence, respect,
and genuine support of those whose actions they seek to govern; to
consult openly and to the fullest extent possible with all whose
interests are affected by decisions being arrived at; to assess in an
objective manner both the real needs and the aspirations of the
communities they serve; to benefit from scientific and moral
advancement in order to make appropriate use of the community’s
resources, including the energies of its members. No single principle
of effective authority is so important as giving priority to building
and maintaining unity among the members of a society and the members
of its administrative institutions. Reference has already been made
to the intimately associated issue of commitment to the search for
justice in all matters.</p>

<p>Clearly, such principles can operate only within a
culture that is essentially democratic in spirit and method. To say
this, however, is not to endorse the ideology of partisanship that
has everywhere boldly assumed democracy’s name and which,
despite impressive contributions to human progress in the past, today
finds itself mired in the cynicism, apathy, and corruption to which
it has given rise. In selecting those who are to take collective
decisions on its behalf, society does not need and is not well served
by the political theater of nominations, candidature, electioneering,
and solicitation. It lies within the capacity of all people, as they
become progressively educated and convinced that their real
development interests are being served by programs proposed to them,
to adopt electoral procedures that will gradually refine the
selection of their decision-making bodies.</p>

<p>As the integration of humanity gains momentum, those who
are thus selected will increasingly have to see all their efforts in
a global perspective. Not only at the national, but also at the local
level, the elected governors of human affairs should, in
Bahá’u’lláh’s view, consider
themselves responsible for the welfare of all of humankind.</p>


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<head>VII</head>

<p>The task of creating a global development strategy that
will accelerate humanity’s coming-of-age constitutes a
challenge to reshape fundamentally all the institutions of society.
The protagonists to whom the challenge addresses itself are all of
the inhabitants of the planet: the generality of humankind, members
of governing institutions at all levels, persons serving in agencies
of international coordination, scientists and social thinkers, all
those endowed with artistic talents or with access to the media of
communication, and leaders of nongovernmental organizations. The
response called for must base itself on an unconditioned recognition
of the oneness of humankind, a commitment to the establishment of
justice as the organizing principle of society, and a determination
to exploit to their utmost the possibilities that a systematic
dialogue between the scientific and religious genius of the race can
bring to the building of human capacity. The enterprise requires a
radical rethinking of most of the concepts and assumptions currently
governing social and economic life. It must be wedded, as well, to a
conviction that, however long the process and whatever setbacks may
be encountered, the governance of human affairs can be conducted
along lines that serve humanity’s real needs.</p>

<p>Only if humanity’s collective childhood has indeed
come to an end and the age of its adulthood is dawning does such a
prospect represent more than another utopian mirage. To imagine that
an effort of the magnitude envisioned here can be summoned up by
despondent and mutually antagonistic peoples and nations runs counter
to the whole of received wisdom. Only if, as Bahá’u’lláh
asserts to be the case, the course of social evolution has arrived at
one of those decisive turning points through which all of the
phenomena of existence are impelled suddenly forward into new stages
of their development, can such a possibility be conceived. A profound
conviction that just so great a transformation in human consciousness
is underway has inspired the views set forth in this statement. To
all who recognize in it familiar promptings from within their own
hearts, Bahá’u’lláh’s words bring
assurance that God has, in this matchless day, endowed humanity with
spiritual resources fully equal to the challenge:</p>

<p>O ye that inhabit the heavens and the earth! There hath
appeared what hath never previously appeared.</p>

<p>This is the Day in which God’s most excellent
favors have been poured out upon men, the Day in which His most
mighty grace hath been infused into all created things.</p>

<p>The turmoil now convulsing human affairs is
unprecedented, and many of its consequences enormously destructive.
Dangers unimagined in all history gather around a distracted
humanity. The greatest error that the world’s leadership could
make at this juncture, however, would be to allow the crisis to cast
doubt on the ultimate outcome of the process that is occurring. A
world is passing away and a new one is struggling to be born. The
habits, attitudes, and institutions that have accumulated over the
centuries are being subjected to tests that are as necessary to human
development as they are inescapable. What is required of the peoples
of the world is a measure of faith and resolve to match the enormous
energies with which the Creator of all things has endowed this
spiritual springtime of the race. “Be united in counsel,”
is Bahá’u’lláh’s appeal,
be one in thought. Let each morn be better than its eve
and each morrow richer than its yesterday. Man’s merit lieth in
service and virtue and not in the pageantry of wealth and riches.
Take heed that your words be purged from idle fancies and worldly
desires and your deeds be cleansed from craftiness and suspicion.
Dissipate not the wealth of your precious lives in the pursuit of
evil and corrupt affection, nor let your endeavors be spent in
promoting your personal interest. Be generous in your days of plenty,
and be patient in the hour of loss. Adversity is followed by success
and rejoicings follow woe. Guard against idleness and sloth, and
cling unto that which profiteth mankind, whether young or old,
whether high or low. Beware lest ye sow tares of dissension among men
or plant thorns of doubt in pure and radiant hearts.</p>
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